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Lower bus fare is fair in city that needs
to get a roll on
By You Nuo
Compared to many other Chinese
cities, Beijing has not been outstanding in improving the quality of
daily life for its residents. However, last week, the municipal
government of Beijing made an extraordinary decision.
In a city that is plagued by hundreds of traffic jams during every peak
time, and in which the fastest means of transportation is still a
bicycle, Beijing officials have mustered enough courage to announce a
major overhaul of the public transit system. The programme starts on New
Year’s Day.
The local government’s plan can now offer a much-needed sense of
certainty for the commuters constantly baffled by the increasing mess
caused by the city’s helpless car boom.
No matter if the reform is a success or not, the planners deserve some
praise for their cleverness and guts.
A considerable amount of money, 4 billion yuan (US$500 million), is to
be allocated to the city’s bus system each year.
For any public service, more financial commitment is better than less,
especially when the government has so much in its coffers. Even if all
the money was spent on buying the wrong buses and building the wrong
roads, there would still be a report on the spending items to the
legislative, and this is always better than public money squandered on
banquets.
A part of the public-transport funding package is to be used to
subsidize bus tickets. Beijing residents can expect to pay a lower fare
than they do now for their daily commutes.
This is very important for members of the low-income groups -
particularly staff of the service industries and migrant workers. On
their wage level, Beijing is quite an expensive city. Any amount of
money these workers can save will help them afford to stay in the city.
There are also plans, though it is still to be seen when they will all
become realities, for some major bus inter-connection centres to link
the inner city with the main satellite towns.
The inconvenience in changing buses in Beijing is obvious for regular
commuters. Little has been done for more than a decade, to make it
substantially easier for commuters to change from train to the right
bus.
If not tackled from now, bus connections will soon become an even
greater headache, and will become an efficiency-killer of the city’s
economy, considering the city is building several subways at the same
time.
Even if the city’s buses continue to move at a snail speed - because
there is no way to control people’s and various government offices’
buying enthusiasm for new cars the convenience in changing buses, and
changing between buses and subways, should not be compromised.
Having said all this, however, I have strong doubts that Beijing’s bus
system reform will solve commuters’ all problems.
It is a rather curious phenomenon, in fact, that the city still does not
have a unified public transit board answering directly to the mayor or
even the premier’s office.
Buses are important, of course, and will remain so for Beijing but
subways and other forms of rail transport, expressways and even air
travel, are gaining their importance more rapidly.
Beijing’s traffic development is still waiting for an all-round
solution.
—The Daily Mail-China Daily news exchange item |